Sunday, July 5, 2015

Summer Project #1: Fence Rejuvenation

The thing I love about summer is I always feel motivated to get things done. During the winter I can't imagine construction, let alone digging up whole garden beds, or re-roofing my shed, but summer arrives and I am motivated. I try to take advantage of the motivation while it's here because normally it's short-lived.

The last couple weeks I've been re-staining my fence. The last time this was done was ten years ago when I first bought the house. I've been dreading it, but the fence is on its last legs, nearly disintegrating in places, falling over in other places, boards are wiggly and there are about ten screws on each board where I have attempted reattach them over and over again. Unfortunately some of the support boards are rotten. I just need it to hang on as long as possible since it'll take a lot of money to replace...money I'd rather spend on something else. Like a new house.
 
I've been dreading this for many reasons.  First, the stain is stinky and toxic. I wear a mask and thankfully, it doesn't seem to make me ill, but I can smell the stain for weeks until it's properly cured. Yuck.

Second, it's a lot of work. More work than nearly anything else I might want to do, so I put it off. It involves cleaning the fence first with a broom and then with water sprayed from a hose on "jet". Some spots are mossy or mildew and that involves washing it down with 30 Seconds which is a bleach compound that cleans things in 30 seconds! It's a miracle cleaner, but highly toxic, and smelly.

Third, it's just messy. The stain gets all over the plants. I have to wear gloves, work clothes, and a mask.

Fourth, it can only be done in dry weather so standing out in the heat of the sun is anything but comfortable.

Fifth, this stain is expensive and it will take at least 7 cans to do most of the fence.

I was going to put it off one more year then for some reason I felt this impulsive urge to jump right in. This stain is gorgeous. It goes on a light orange color and then ten minutes later it's a dark copper. It really rejuvenates the wood, too. Four cans later the front and side parts are done. I may need to wait to do the backyard fence.

Before Photo...sun bleached nearly white.
See the difference?



 

Old fence made to look kind of new! Love it!

4 comments:

  1. What a difference! I need to redo the front porch floors this summer. Same process. I use 30 seconds, too. I used that on the siding , too, when I was staining that. Nasty stuff!
    BTW, it contains trisodium phosphate, which is bad news for surface water - promotes algae blooms. It's fine for gardens and won't travel through soil to water, but could run off concrete and impermeable surfaces to surface water sources - just a caution there.

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    1. I also thought it used TSP as it works better than just bleach, but I looked over the ingredients on this jug and no mention of it. But wouldn't the chloride counteract the algae bloom? I'll use it anyway...with the condition of the fence not much will make it worse and all this work will only (hopefully) keep it lasting a little longer than it normally would.

      It does really make a difference! It feels like a new fence! Love it.

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  2. Maybe 30 seconds has different formulations - maybe one without TSP for city use. Beautiful fence!

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